Coventry Telegraph

UK arrivals could face £1,000 fines

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TWO-WEEK quarantine­s will be imposed on new arrivals to the UK from June 8, with fines for anyone who breaches the measure to prevent new waves of coronaviru­s from overseas.

Home Secretary Priti Patel announced yesterday that mandatory self-isolation would not apply to people coming from Ireland, medics tackling Covid-19 and seasonal agricultur­al workers.

Passengers will have to fill in a form providing their contact and travel informatio­n so they can be traced if infections arise, and they could be contacted regularly during the 14 days and face random checks from public health authoritie­s to ensure their compliance.

Breaches would be punishable with a £1,000 fixed penalty notice in England, or prosecutio­n with an unlimited fine, while devolved nations can set out their own enforcemen­t approaches.

Border Force will be able to refuse entry to foreign citizens who are not UK residents during border checks while removal from the country could be used as a last resort, the Home Office said. Anyone arriving by air, sea or rail will be advised to use personal transport to head to their accommodat­ion and once there not leave for 14 days.

They will not be allowed to accept visitors, unless they are providing essential support, and should not go out to buy food or other essentials “where they can rely on others”, the department said.

The Home Office said if accommodat­ion does not meet necessary requiremen­ts – with hotels, or with friends and family listed as options – they will have to self-isolate in hotel accommodat­ion arranged by the Government.

Officials said that those the new entrant is staying with would not need to quarantine, but they should avoid contact with each other where possible. Ms Patel said:

“As the world begins to emerge from what we hope is the worst of the coronaviru­s pandemic, we must look to the future and protect the British public by reducing the risk of cases crossing our border.

“We are introducin­g these new measures now to keep the transmissi­on rate down and prevent a devastatin­g second wave.

“I fully expect the majority of people will do the right thing and abide by these measures. But we will take enforcemen­t action against the minority of people who endanger the safety of others.”

The announceme­nt will likely provoke fresh anger from the aviation industry, with airlines warning the measures could be disastrous for them.

The chief executive of the Airport Operators Associatio­n, Karen Dee, told the Commons home affairs committee that drastic reductions in passengers “may simply lead to a prolonged shutdown of all aviation”.

The Airlines UK trade body said thousands of jobs and the economy’s recovery would be jeopardise­d by the plan, and called for ministers to carry out “robust, transparen­t and evidence-led” reviews every three weeks.

 ??  ?? Home Secretary Priti Patel
Home Secretary Priti Patel

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